sábado, 2 de junio de 2018

Cuba ‘sonic attack’ conspiracy theories and flawed science

Letter from world scientists to the UK Guardian newspaper.


Science works best when qualified people can evaluate evidence without political pressure to draw poorly founded conclusions, say 15 neuroscientists and physicists

Friday 1 Jun 2018 / 16.59

As neuroscientists and physicists we have no reason to dispute that US diplomats living in Cuba heard loud noises, or that they reported feeling ill afterwards. Some US politicians have seized on these reports to construct conspiracy theories in which they imagine a mysterious disease-causing "sound ray gun" – something that isn't possible with today's technology. These same politicians have used their positions of authority to present their speculations to a credulous public as though they are fact. The pronouncements, in turn, have led to international confrontation and hysteria, resulting in the removal and expulsion of diplomats, and travel advisories. Now, an apparently analogous incident has been reported in China.

A "preliminary communication" from the University of Pennsylvania, with US government support, published in the prestigious Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), has been used to buttress this putative "acoustic attack" idea with science. In fact, that work is deeply flawed, and does nothing to support the attack theory. We thus applaud the recent paper by Sergio Della Sala and Robert McIntosh, for its thoughtful criticisms of the JAMA report, and praise the effort described in the Guardian (Cuba calls on US and Canada to investigate 'sonic attack' claims, 29 May) to engage in an international scientific collaboration to study any connection between the illnesses and sound. Science works best this way, when qualified people can evaluate evidence without political pressure to draw poorly founded conclusions. 

We hope that sober and calmer heads will prevail in de-escalating this frenzy, avoiding a chill in both diplomatic relations and scientific collaboration between the US and Cuba.

Mark M Rasenick, University of Illinois College of Medicine

György Buzsáki, New York University

Mark S Cohen, University of California, Los Angeles

Alan C Evans, Montreal Neurological Institute

Karl J Friston, University College London

Janina R Galler, Harvard University

Rainer Goebel, Maastricht University

Steven A Hillyard, University of California, San Diego

May-Britt Moser, Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Gregory V Simpson, Think-Now

Robert Turner, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig

Mitchell Valdés-Sosa, Cuban Center for Neuroscience

Pedro Valdés-Sosa, Cuban Center for Neuroscience

John Darrell Van Horn, University of Southern California

Arno Villringer, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig

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